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This was reported by clang, and in order for it to understand attributes
properly, I had to modify the macro that checks for non-gcc compilers.
Signed-off-by: Robin Sonefors <robin.sonefors@op5.com>
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Before this patch, there was a constant, MAX_OIDS, that determined the
amount of slots most (but not all - see labels) array data structures
would have. It was set to 8.
Some users would like to use more than that, but rather than bumping the
constant, let's use the same type of logic we already use for labels -
grow the space 8 slots at a time. This will allow us to potentially
support an infinite amount of oids - or at least as many as the
packetsize on the SNMP server allows, which is usually significantly
smaller than infinity, yet often larger than 8.
Signed-off-by: Robin Sonefors <robin.sonefors@op5.com>
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http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=3269273&group_id=29880&atid=397597
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Fixes for check_apt handling of -i/-e/-c regexps and SECURITY_RE, plus tests
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nagios.com seems to have changed their ip address. Also added tests
about -4/-6 option.
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Add command line options -4 and -6 (--use-ipv4 and
--use-ipv6) to check_dig.
Effectively this adds no new functionality, just a
shortcut for:
check_dig -A "-4"
check_dig -A "-6"
Needed for using check_dig with the check_v46 wrapper
(see e.g.
https://gitorious.org/nagios-monitoring-tools/nagios-monitoring-tools/blobs/master/check_v46)
which requires -4/-6 command line option support.
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The memory allocation mixed up number of bytes with number of pointers,
meaning as soon as we'd reach (on 64 bit systems) the second argument,
we'd start writing it outside of our allocated memory.
Normally, this isn't too visible, but as soon as you (again, on my 64
bit system) reach argument number 8, you get a segfault. It is easily
reproducible with:
check_snmp -o '' -l '' -o '' -l '' -o '' -l '' -o '' -l '' \
-o '' -l '' -o '' -l '' -o '' -l '' -o '' -l ''
This patch allocates the proper amount of memory, to fix the issue.
Signed-off-by: Robin Sonefors <robin.sonefors@op5.com>
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connect errors may happen if clients check agains dual
stacked ipv4/6 ntp servers.
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This adds support for @<range> and makes stuff a bit simpler by removing code
duplications.
Note: Previously, the compatibility code for 'check_procs <warn> <max>'
accepted something like 'check_procs -w 10:-1 -c 10:-1 20 50' as well
(treating it as if '-w 10:20 -c 10:50' was specified). This is no longer the
case ... additional arguments are only used as warn/crit thresholds in case
-w/-c is not specified at all.
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Dying without a hint of what went wrong is just plain annoying. With
this patch we at least get a hint.
While at it, we fix the string offset so the output we're interested
in doesn't keep the equal sign that snmpget prints.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Ericsson <ae@op5.se>
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Once upon a time, check_snmp used to accept inverse ranges in the
format of '2:1' to mean "alert if value is inside this range".
Since commit 7cb3ae09334796f3b54e4e6438e38c2cc679b360, ranges such
as those have instead triggered the error "Range format incorrect"
and resulted in an UNKNOWN warning state. This patch attempts to
fix the situation so that the old-style ranges continues to mean
exactly what the once did and people with lots of snmp checks can
avoid a bazillion false positives from their environments.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Ericsson <ae@op5.se>
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Let OpenSSL load its configuration file. See the OPENSSL_config(3) man
page for details.
(Suggested by Max Kosmach in Debian bug report #689960, forwarded by Jan
Wagner.)
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Add a hidden "--input-file" option to check_apt (modelled on
check_procs) so that it can take files with sample apt output as input.
Add tests for my SECURITY_RE fix (debian3) and for the include, exclude
and critical options.
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For the default security upgrade detection regular expression, match
"Debian-Security" in package description when it's anywhere after the
first parenthesis (not just the second space-delimited word). For
example:
... (4.0.1-5.4 Debian:6.0.6/stable, Debian-Security:6.0/stable ...
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"critical" regular expressions. Instead, check for lines beginning
with "Inst" using strncmp and apply the regular expressions only when
such lines are found.
Fixes Debian bug #522812, along the lines suggested by the bug
submitter, Justin T Pryzby.
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CRITCAL -> CRITICAL typo
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Mention that the -C option now accepts two comma-separated values.
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threshold data
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In tests/check_http.t, tabs are used for indentation.
While at it, apply another few cosmetic changes.
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Fix the test case which is meant to make sure that
check_http -C <n>,<m> [...]
returns a CRITICAL state if <m> is large enough.
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Fix the threshold specifications in the example for checking the number
of truechimers.
Reported by Marc Haber on the "nagios-users" mailing list (Message-ID:
<20120722142840.GA6931@torres.zugschlus.de>).
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Mention that the check_ntp_peer plugin checks the stratum of the
synchronization peer, not the stratum of the monitored server itself.
Thanks to Marc Haber for bringing this up on the "nagios-users" mailing
list (Message-ID: <20120722142840.GA6931@torres.zugschlus.de>).
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In check_http.c, tabs aren't used for indentation.
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The "ssl_version" variable was undeclared when the plugins were compiled
--without-openssl and --without-gnutls.
Bug reported by Michael LaCorte on the "nagiosplug-help" mailing list
(Message-ID: <CCD30C91-A2A8-463A-82A9-F99B54F741D3@gmail.com>).
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A recent update removed the declarations for a couple variables in
check_smtp.c that are still being used, which caused a failure
in the compilation of check_smtp.c. This commit restores those variable
declarations so the check_smtp.c will again compile.
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Earlier versions of check_smtp generated an (invalid) "MAIL FROM"
command without arguments by default. These days, a "MAIL FROM" command
is only sent if the --from option is specified.
This commit removes a comment which explains the old behaviour, and it
updates a variable name accordingly.
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Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
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Fixes many instances of
warning: ignoring return value of 'asprintf', declared with attribute warn_unused_result [-Wunused-result]
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
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Apparently some people used -f '<nagios@example.com>' to work around
the bug I just fixed in the MAIL FROM: command generation. Although
the resulting command wasn't RFC-compliant, it was working with some
MTAs, so let's continue to support this syntax now that we generate
RFC-compliant commands.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
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Every version of the SMTP standard (from RFC 821 to the current RFC
5321) requires the address following MAIL FROM: to follow the colon
immediately (with no space) and to be surrounded by angle brackets.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
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When using the 1.4.15 release of the Nagios Plugins, a command such as
check_tcp -H pop.example.com -p 995 -D 14
usually produced two lines of output, e.g.:
OK - Certificate will expire on 12/13/2014 23:59.
TCP OK - 0.009 second response time on port 995|time=0.008849s;;;0.000000;10.000000
The second line was removed by 4d06603060fc1233861b164870f0d3a2e0d8d2eb.
However, as the old two-line output is a valid (though in this case
unintended) way to spit out performance data, removing the second line
might break current setups. Therefore, we revert to the old behaviour,
at least for the moment.
The issue was reported by Jochen Bern on the "nagiosplug-devel" mailing
list (Message-ID: <4FEAE812.8030309@LINworks.de>).
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Add --perf-oids option for check_snmp to retain optional 1.4.14 compatibility
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fixed typo in sslutils
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expiration checks of check_tcp, check_http, check_smtp
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Our die() function expects the caller to append the trailing newline
character.
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Conflicts:
NEWS
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Don't return a WARNING state if the number of lost packets is greater
than zero but below the specified warning threshold. This happened
because the check_ping plugin used the exit status of the ping(1)
utility. (#3535140 - Tobias Brox)
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In the C shell and in the Z shell, the "?" character must be quoted or
backslash-escaped in order to use it verbatim. Therefore, a command
such as
check_by_ssh -H test.example.com -l joe echo huh?
might fail, depending on joe's login shell on test.example.com.
Just to make sure, this commit removes most punctuation characters from
our test strings.
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The ping6(1) implementation provided by Debian's iputils-ping package
may produce output such as the following:
| 3 packets transmitted, 0 received, +3 errors, 100% packet loss, time 2009ms
There's a corresponding pattern in check_ping.c:458:
| "%*d packets transmitted, %*d received, +%*d errors, %d%% packet loss"
Without this fix, the pattern in check_ping.c:456 matched first (as
sscanf(3) interprets "+3" as a match for "%d"):
| "%*d packets transmitted, %*d received, %d%% loss, time"
(#1894850 - Debian bug report #514588 - Matej Vela)
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Fix indentation and whitespace issues, and correct some capitalization
errors in error messages. The behaviour is unchanged.
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GnuTLS doesn't support SSL version 2.
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